Zardari tells PCB to help tainted trio in UK

ISLAMABAD: Disappointed with the PCB's handling of the spot-fixing trial at the end of which led to three of country's cricketers being jailed in the UK, Pakistan PresidentAsif Ali Zardari has instructed it to provide all necessary legal help to the tainted trio.

Interior minister Rehman Malik said Zardari, also the patron-in-chief of the PCB, is miffed with the way the matter was dealt with by the Board.

The spot-fixing trial ended on Thursday with former Test captain Salman Butt and pacers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir being jailed after 20 days of non-stop hearings. Malik said that he had briefed the President on the trial and sentences handed to the three players.

"The President has directed that he be given a comprehensive report from the Pakistan Cricket Board on the issue and on the sentences given to our players," Malik said.

The President has also directed the PCB and Malik to look for ways to bail out the three players.

While the court handed out a 30-month sentence to Butt who was captain when the spot-fixing allegations surfaced, Asif was given a one year jail term and Amir, 19, was told to spend six months in a youth detention and correction centre.

Malik told reporters that he had asked Pakistan's High Commissioner to UK Wajid Shamsul Hassan to provide necessary legal aid to the trio where possible.

Malik had said that if it were a conspiracy against the players, it should be revealed to the world and a commission should investigate the issue from scratch.

"We cannot rule out the possibility of any of the convicted players being innocent," he said.